The Prairie (Fiscle Part 3) Of 2, J Fenimore Cooper [best e reader for manga txt] 📗
- Author: J Fenimore Cooper
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Mighty Labour, Is Drawing To A Premature Close, And I Would Gladly
Unburden My Mind To One Who, If Not A Pupil Of Science, Has At Least
Some Of The Knowledge Which Civilisation Imparts To Its Meanest
Subjects. Doubtless Many And Earnest Enquiries Will Be Made After My
Fate, By The Learned Societies Of The World, And Perhaps Expeditions
Will Be Sent Into These Regions To Remove Any Doubts, Which May Arise
On So Important A Subject. I Esteem Myself Happy That A Man, Who
Speaks The Vernacular, Is Present, To Preserve The Record Of My End.
You Will Say That After A Well-Spent And Glorious Life, I Died A
Martyr To Science, And A Victim To Mental Darkness. As I Expect To Be
Particularly Calm And Abstracted In My Last Moments, If You Add A Few
Details, Concerning The Fortitude And Scholastic Dignity With Which I
Met My Death, It May Serve To Encourage Future Aspirants For Similar
Honours, And Assuredly Give Offence To No One. And Now, Friend
Trapper, As A Duty I Owe To Human Nature, I Will Conclude By Demanding
If All Hope Has Deserted Me, Or If Any Means Still Exist By Which So
Much Valuable Information May Be Rescued From The Grasp Of Ignorance,
And Preserved To The Pages Of Natural History."
The Old Man Lent An Attentive Ear To This Melancholy Appeal, And
Apparently He Reflected On Every Side Of The Important Question,
Before He Would Presume To Answer.
"I Take It, Friend Physicianer," He At Length Gravely Replied, "That
The Chances Of Life And Death, In Your Particular Case, Depend
Altogether On The Will Of Providence, As It May Be Pleased To Manifest
It, Through The Accursed Windings Of Indian Cunning. For My Own Part,
I See No Great Difference In The Main End To Be Gained, Inasmuch As It
Can Matter No One Greatly, Yourself Excepted, Whether You Live Or
Die."
"Would You Account The Fall Of A Corner-Stone, From The Foundations Of
The Edifice Of Learning, A Matter Of Indifference To Contemporaries Or
To Posterity?" Interrupted Obed. "Besides, My Aged Associate," He
Reproachfully Added, "The Interest, That A Man Has In His Own
Existence, Is By No Means Trifling, However It May Be Eclipsed By His
Devotion To More General And Philanthropic Feelings."
"What I Would Say Is This," Resumed The Trapper, Who Was Far From
Understanding All The Subtle Distinctions With Which His More Learned
Companion So Often Saw Fit To Embellish His Discourse; "There Is But
One Birth And One Death To All Things, Be It Hound, Or Be It Deer; Be
It Red Skin, Or Be It White. Both Are In The Hands Of The Lord, It
Being As Unlawful For Man To Strive To Hasten The One, As Impossible
To Prevent The Other. But I Will Not Say That Something May Not Be
Done To Put The Last Moment Aside, For A While At Least, And Therefore
It Is A Question, That Any One Has A Right To Put To His Own Wisdom,
How Far He Will Go, And How Much Pain He Will Suffer, To Lengthen Out
A Time That May Have Been Too Long Already. Many A Dreary Winter And
Scorching Summer Has Gone By Since I Have Turned, To The Right Hand Or
To The Left, To Add An Hour To A Life That Has Already Stretched
Beyond Fourscore Years. I Keep Myself As Ready To Answer To My Name As
A Soldier At Evening Roll-Call. In My Judgment, If Your Cases Are Left
To Indian Tempers, The Policy Of The Great Sioux Will Lead His People
Part 3 Chapter 27 Pg 107To Sacrifice You All; Nor Do I Put Much Dependence On His Seeming Love
For Me; Therefore It Becomes A Question Whether You Are Ready For Such
A Journey; And If, Being Ready, Whether This Is Not As Good A Time To
Start As Another. Should My Opinion Be Asked, Thus Far Will I Give It
In Your Favour; That Is To Say, It Is My Belief Your Life Has Been
Innocent Enough, Touching Any Great Offences That You May Have
Committed, Though Honesty Compels Me To Add, That I Think All You Can
Lay Claim To, On The Score Of Activity In Deeds, Will Not Amount To
Any Thing Worth Naming In The Great Account."
Obed Turned A Rueful Eye On The Calm, Philosophic Countenance Of The
Other, As He Answered With So Discouraging A Statement Of His Case,
Clearing His Throat, As He Did So, In Order To Conceal The Desperate
Concern Which Began To Beset His Faculties, With A Vestige Of That
Pride, Which Rarely Deserts Poor Human Nature, Even In The Greatest
Emergencies.
"I Believe, Venerable Hunter," He Replied, "Considering The Question
In All Its Bearings, And Assuming That Your Theory Is Just, It Will Be
The Safest To Conclude That I Am Not Prepared To Make So Hasty A
Departure, And That Measures Of Precaution Should Be, Forthwith,
Resorted To."
"Being In That Mind," Returned The Deliberate Trapper, "I Will Act For
You As I Would For Myself; Though As Time Has Begun To Roll Down The
Hill With You, I Will Just Advise That You Look To Your Case Speedily,
For It May So Happen That Your Name Will Be Heard, When Quite As
Little Prepared To Answer To It As Now."
With This Amicable Understanding, The Old Man Drew Back Again Into The
Ring, Where He Stood Musing On The Course He Should Now Adopt, With
The Singular Mixture Of Decision And Resignation That Proceeded From
His Habits And His Humility, And Which United To Form A Character, In
Which Excessive Energy, And The Most Meek Submission To The Will Of
Providence, Were Oddly Enough Combined.
Part 3 Chapter 28 Pg 108
The Witch, In Smithfield, Shall Be Burned To Ashes, And You Three
Shall Be Strangled On The Gallows.
--Shakspeare.
The Siouxes Had Awaited The Issue Of The Foregoing Dialogue With
Commendable Patience. Most Of The Band Were Restrained, By The Secret
Awe With Which They Regarded The Mysterious Character Of Obed; While A
Few Of The More Intelligent Chiefs Gladly Profited By The Opportunity,
To Arrange Their Thoughts For The Struggle That Was Plainly Foreseen.
Mahtoree, Influenced By Neither Of These Feelings, Was Content To Show
The Trapper How Much He Conceded To His Pleasure; And When The Old Man
Part 3 Chapter 28 Pg 109Discontinued The Discourse, He Received From The Chief A Glance, That
Was Intended To Remind Him Of The Patience, With Which He Had Awaited
His Movements. A Profound And Motionless Silence Succeeded The Short
Interruption. Then Mahtoree Arose, Evidently Prepared To Speak. First
Placing Himself In An Attitude Of Dignity, He Turned A Steady And
Severe Look On The Whole Assembly. The Expression Of His Eye, However,
Changed As It Glanced Across The Different Countenances Of His
Supporters And Of His Opponents. To The Former The Look, Though Stern,
Was Not Threatening, While It Seemed To Tell The Latter All The
Hazards They Incurred, In Daring To Brave The Resentment Of One So
Powerful.
Still, In The Midst Of So Much Hauteur And Confidence, The Sagacity
And Cunning Of The Teton Did Not Desert Him. When He Had Thrown The
Gauntlet, As It Were, To The Whole Tribe, And Sufficiently Asserted
His Claim To Superiority, His Mien Became More Affable And His Eye
Less Angry. Then It Was That He Raised His Voice, In The Midst Of A
Death-Like Stillness, Varying Its Tones To Suit The Changing Character
Of His Images, And Of His Eloquence.
"What Is A Sioux?" The Chief Sagaciously Began; "He Is Ruler Of The
Prairies, And Master Of Its Beasts. The Fishes In The 'River Of
Troubled Waters' Know Him, And Come At His Call. He Is A Fox In
Counsel; An Eagle In Sight; A Grizzly Bear In Combat. A Dahcotah Is A
Man!" After Waiting For The Low Murmur Of Approbation, Which Followed
This Flattering Portrait Of His People, To Subside, The Teton
Continued--"What Is A Pawnee? A Thief, Who Only Steals From Women; A
Red-Skin, Who Is Not Brave; A Hunter, That Begs For His Venison. In
Counsel He Is A Squirrel, Hopping From Place To Place; He Is An Owl,
That Goes On The Prairies At Night; In Battle He Is An Elk, Whose Legs
Are Long. A Pawnee Is A Woman." Another Pause Succeeded, During Which
A Yell Of Delight Broke From Several Mouths, And A Demand Was Made,
That The Taunting Words Should Be Translated To The Unconscious
Subject Of Their Biting Contempt. The Old Man Took His Cue From The
Eyes Of Mahtoree, And Complied. Hard-Heart Listened Gravely, And Then,
As If Apprized That His Time To Speak Had Not Arrived, He Once More
Bent His Look On The Vacant Air. The Orator Watched His Countenance,
With An Expression That Manifested How Inextinguishable Was The Hatred
He Felt For The Only Chief, Far And Near, Whose Fame Might
Advantageously Be Compared With His Own. Though Disappointed In Not
Having Touched The Pride Of One Whom He Regarded As A Boy, He
Proceeded, What He Considered As Far More Important, To Quicken The
Tempers Of The Men Of His Own Tribe, In Order That They Might Be
Prepared To Work His Savage Purposes. "If The Earth Was Covered With
Rats, Which Are Good For Nothing," He Said, "There Would Be No Room
For Buffaloes, Which Give Food And Clothes To An Indian. If The
Prairies Were Covered With Pawnees, There Would Be No Room For The
Foot Of A Dahcotah. A Loup Is A Rat, A Sioux A Heavy Buffaloe; Let The
Buffaloes Tread Upon The Rats And Make Room For Themselves.
"My Brothers, A Little Child Has Spoken To You. He Tells You, His Hair
Is Not Grey, But Frozen--That The Grass Will Not Grow Where A Pale-
Face Has Died. Does He Know The Colour Of The Blood Of A Big-Knife?
No! I Know He Does Not; He Has
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